Much has already been said about President Obama’s speech on Afghanistan (see text here) yesterday night. What struck me about the speech is Obama’s inability to take a stand on the tough issues. When the going gets tough, he not only wavers — he tries to play both sides of the field.
In both his speech and his actions, Obama’s disapproval of the surge in Iraq, and now in Afghanistan, is obvious. But he made Afghanistan ‘his war’ long ago and long before his speech yesterday night. In an effort to capitalize on the unpopularity and ongoing debate over the Iraq war, he emphasized Afghanistan as the right and necessary war on the campaign trail. While he’s backtracked on many issues (didn’t you hear that the stimulus wasn’t a jobs bill?), the public pressure from his own generals, the lives at stake (both of our military abroad and our own at home) made it necessary for him to step to the plate on this issue.
But, instead of laying out a strategy for success, he dilly-dallied, more concerned with his standing among his fellow liberals than with winning in Afghanistan (which, as everyone has pointed out, he made no mention of yesterday evening.) His big announcement: a surge of 30,000 soldiers in Afghanistan to be executed quickly, but they will all begin to be pulled out by July of 2011. I do agree that given this President’s tendency to govern through loopholes, the world ‘begin’ is of importance — as a way for Obama to get out of this commitment (see update below) if things are going badly in Afghanistan, AND public opinion supports remaining there when the time comes. (After all, public opinion means more to this President than results.)
What if a local politician were to announce an increase in law enforcement and resources to crack down on gang activity and violence in a particularly rough neighborhood, while simultaneously choosing an arbitrary timeline down the road at which all such resources would be pulled. What do you think the bad guys would do in the meantime? What would happen on that pullout date?
Michelle Malkin reports that Charles Krauthammer called the speech “strange” and “uncertainty compounding uncertainty.” To those observations, I’d like to add my own — that the President is a afraid of commitment. Instead of taking a side on Afghanistan, either the generals’ or of those advocating complete withdrawal, he tried to appease both groups. This strategy is more than just confusing, it’s unstable and ultimately, potentially very dangerous.
Update: Well, that didn’t take long. Just a few hours after posting this, the administration started backtracking on the withdrawal date and emphasizing that any withdrawal would be contingent upon certain conditions being met on the ground. Less than 24 hours after laying out his strategy, the President has already started backing away from yet another promise.
While I would like to commend the President and the administration for changing tactics and perhaps listening to critics who found their withdrawal plan unwise, it’s hard to take any of their promises at face value. Who knows what word play they may rely on tomorrow to escape responsibility for some other commitment?


